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Meanwhile, President Barack Obama is seeking to make immigration overhaul a wedge issue against Republicans, telling voters along the border in El Paso, Texas, this week to push Congress to pass legislation providing a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants. His move comes amid rapid Mexican population growth mostly in the South and West that could help tip swing states but has also prompted Republican-controlled legislatures in Arizona and Utah to pass stringent laws seeking to limit illegal immigration. Mexican immigrants, who are younger and more likely to have children, tend to lean Democratic if they vote. In all, 12 of the 14 states plus the District of Columbia with median ages of 36 or younger are located in the South and West, according to census figures. They are Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, Oklahoma, Texas and Utah. By contrast, 13 of the 20 states with median ages of 38 or higher fell in the Midwest and Northeast. They are Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin. Nationally, the median age is about 36.8, up from 35.3 in 2000. The figures are based on the Census Bureau's 2009 American Community Survey, which samples 3 million U.S. households, as well as 2010 census data on age, household relationships and racial and ethnic groups for the 24 states and the District of Columbia that have been released so far this month. Among the findings: Big cities posted jumps in median age as young families moved to the suburbs or for jobs elsewhere: Detroit, increasing nearly 4 years to 34.8; Cleveland, 2.7 years to 35.7; and Los Angeles, 2.5 years to 34.1. On the other hand, Boston and the District of Columbia saw drops in median age, to 30.8 and 33.8 years, respectively, as young adults moved in to attend colleges or seek jobs in burgeoning biotech industries in the metro areas. Mexicans accounted for more than half of the total Hispanic gains in roughly 38 states over the last decade, with the biggest shares found in states near or along the U.S.-Mexico border, including New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, Nevada and California. Traditional married couples with children were most likely found in Utah, Idaho, Texas and California, making up nearly 1 in 4 households there. Non-family households typically composed of singles ages 65 and older lived mostly in Midwestern or Northeastern states such as North Dakota, Massachusetts, Vermont, Rhode Island and Maine. Nevada, Texas and Wyoming, which had strong economies that helped attract young workers or immigrants for at least portions of the last decade, were among the states with some of the smallest increases in median age of roughly 1 year. Texas also gained nearly 1 million children, representing about half the U.S. total gain in children; the ones in Texas were almost all Hispanic. ___ Online:
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